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Chapter 25 The Consolidation of Latin America, 1830-1920 I

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Title: Chapter 25 The Consolidation of Latin America, 1830-1920 I


1
Chapter 25
  • The Consolidation of Latin America, 1830-1920
  • I) From Colonies to Nations
  • II) New Nations Confront Old and New Problems
  • III) Latin American Economies and World Markets,
    1820-1870
  • IV) Societies in Search of Themselves
  • V) The Great Boom, 1880-1920

2
Chapter 25 Introduction
  • Most Latin American nations gained independence
    from colonial control early in the nineteenth
    century.
  • The political culture of its leaders had been
    shaped by the Enlightenment, but they faced
    problems growing from their own history.
  • Their colonial heritage did not include
    participatory government highly centralized
    states had created patterns of both dependence
    and resentment.
  • Class and regional interests divided nations
    wealth was unevenly distributed.
  • The rise of European industrial capitalism placed
    Latin American nations in a dependent economic
    position.

3
I) From Colonies to Nations
  • By the late eighteenth century, Creole elites
    questioned the necessity of remaining colonial
    subjects.
  • The mass of the population resented government
    policies.
  • Early attempts at revolution failed because the
    elites feared the potential power of those under
    them.

4
a) Causes of Political Change
  • Four external events had a major effect on Latin
    American political thought.
  • The American Revolution provided a model for
    colonial rebellion.
  • The French Revolution offered revolutionary
    ideology, but it was rejected by elites as too
    radical politically and socially.
  • The slave rebellion on the French island of St.
    Domingue led by François-Dominique Toussaint
    LOverture in 1791 ended in 1804 with the
    independent republic of Haiti. The success of the
    slaves frightened colonial elites and made them
    even more cautious about social change.
  • The final and precipitating factor was the
    confused political situation in Spain and
    Portugal caused by French invasion and
    occupation. In Spain, the French deposed the king
    in favor of Napoleon's brother but then had to
    face prolonged civil war.
  • Latin American Creoles declared loyalty to the
    Spanish ruler but began to rule the colonies
    themselves.

5
b) Spanish American Independence Struggles
  • In Mexico, a Creole conspiracy caused Father
    Miguel de Hidalgo to appeal in 1810 to Indians
    and mestizos for support.
  • After early victories, Hidalgo lost Creole
    support and was executed.
  • The revolution continued and conservative Creoles
    under Augustín de Iturbide won independence.
  • The new state, a monarchy based on Creole
    dominance, collapsed in 1824.
  • Mexico became a republic, and Central America,
    until then part of the empire, divided into
    independent nations.

6
b) Spanish American Independence Struggles
  • In northern South America, an independence
    movement led by a Creole officer, Simon Bolívar,
    began in Caracas in 1810. Between 1817 and 1822,
    he won victories in Venezuela, Colombia, and
    Ecuador. The three countries were united as Gran
    Colombia until political differences in 1830
    caused separation.
  • In southern South America, rebellion began in Rio
    de la Plata under the leadership of José de San
    Martín. Buenos Aires opted for autonomy in 1810.
    In 1816, the independence of the United Republic
    of Rio de la Plata was proclaimed.
  • Paraguay separated from it in 1813. The remaining
    Spanish territories fell to Jose de San Martín's
    forces by 1825 all of Spanish America had won
    political independence. All were republics with
    representative governments.

7
c) Brazilian Independence
  • By the end of the eighteenth century, Brazil was
    Portugals most important colonial possession.
    The presence of a large slave population tempered
    the elites thoughts of independence.
  • The French invasion of Portugal in 1807 led the
    royal family and many of the nobility to flee to
    Brazil. Rio de Janeiro became the real capital of
    the Portuguese empire. Brazil's ports were opened
    to world commerce because of pressure from
    Britain, Portugal's powerful wartime ally. King
    João VI remained in Brazil until 1820. The
    presence of the court made Rio de Janeiro into a
    great capital city.
  • When João VI returned to Portugal to deal with a
    liberal revolution, he left his son Pedro as
    regent. When it became clear that Brazil was to
    return to colonial status, Pedro declared its
    independence in 1822 and became the
    constitutional emperor, Pedro I.
  • Independent Brazil maintained the existing
    social order based on slavery.

8
II) New Nations Confront Old and New Problems
  • Many of the leaders of Latin American
    independence shared Enlightenment political and
    economic ideals.
  • There was less agreement about the role of the
    Catholic Church as the exclusive state religion.
  • Some leaders had egalitarian beliefs. Slavery was
    abolished in all the former Spanish colonies by
    1854. Better treatment of Indians and mestizos
    was blocked by the elite's fears of losing tax
    revenue and control.
  • Property and literacy qualifications limited
    voting women remained subordinate to men.

9
a) Political Fragmentation
  • Early efforts for political unity quickly failed
    because of regional rivalries and internal
    frictions.
  • The great size of the Spanish colonial world and
    its poor transportation systems gave the eighteen
    new nations a local focus.
  • The Andean nations of Peru and Bolivia, with
    their large Indian populations and conservative
    colonial aristocracies, flirted with union from
    1829-1839 under mestizo general Andes Santa Cruz,
    but regional rivalries and fears of their
    neighbors undermined the effort.
  • The great majority of their peoples were outside
    of the political process.

10
b) Caudillos, Politics, and the Church
  • The new nations suffered from the warfare, ending
    in independence. Armies loyal to their leaders
    led to the rise of caudillos, men who controlled
    local areas.
  • They intervened in national politics to make and
    unmake governments. At times, the caudillos
    defended the interests of regional elitesor of
    Indians and peasants. In general, they
    disregarded representative forms and the rule of
    law.
  • There were many differences among leaders about
    the forms of republican government. Centralists
    wanted strong governments with broad powers,
    while federalists favored awarding authority to
    regional governments.
  • Liberals, influenced by the French and United
    States models, stressed individual rights,
    opposed the corporate structure of colonial
    society, and favored a federalist government.
    Conservatives wanted a centralized state and
    wished to maintain a society where corporate
    groups ruled social action.

11
b) Caudillos, Politics, and the Church
  • The role of the church became a critical
    political issue. Liberals sought to limit its
    civil role but met strong opposition from
    conservatives and the papacy.
  • The political parties that formed were led by
    landowners and the urban middle class they
    argued about liberal or conservative ideas but
    shared basic class loyalties.
  • The general population might be mobilized by the
    force and personality of a particular leader such
    as Juan Manuel de Rosas in Argentina or Antonio
    Lopez de Santa Anna in Mexico, but this was rare.
  • The rest of the population was not concerned with
    political ideology. The result was enduring
    political instability, with rapid turnovers of
    rulers and constitutions.
  • Only a few nations had general stability Chile
    after reforms of its system in 1833, and the
    Brazilian monarchy. For most of Latin America,
    the basic questions of government and society
    remained unresolved.

12
III) Latin American Economies and World Markets,
1820-1870
  • After the defeat of Napoleon, any plans for
    ending Latin American independence were thwarted
    by the opposition of Britain and the United
    States.
  • The Monroe Doctrine of 1823 stated clearly that
    any attempt by a European power to colonize the
    Americas would be considered an unfriendly act by
    the United States.
  • The price for British support was freedom of
    trade. Britain replaced Spain as a dominant
    economic force in a type of neocolonial
    commercial system.
  • It became a major consumer of Latin American
    products and sold its manufactured goods to the
    new nations. The free entry and export of goods
    benefited port cities and landowners, but it
    damaged regional industries producing for
    internal markets.
  • The resulting dependency on foreign markets
    reinforced the old order, which made land the
    basis of wealth and prestige.

13
a) Mid-Century Stagnation
  • The Latin American economy was stagnant between
    1820 and 1850. The mining sector had suffered
    from the independence wars, transportation and
    port facilities remained underdeveloped, and
    investment capital was lacking.
  • The situation changed after 1850 when European
    market expansion created demand for local
    products. The export of coffee, hides, beef,
    minerals, grains, and guano brought revenues to
    governments, urban growth, and transportation
    improvements.
  • Liberal reformers during the 1820s and 1830s
    attempted to break colonial patterns and follow
    European trends. Latin American societies were
    not ready for many of the reforms the
    conservative weight of the church, landowners,
    and army remained potent. They returned to power
    by the 1840s and halted or hindered reform. An
    alliance between them and peasantry emerged to
    oppose change.

14
b) Economic Resurgence and Liberal Politics
  • Liberals returned to power during the last
    quarter of the nineteenth century. They based
    their policies on the positivism of French
    philosopher Auguste Comte, stressing a scientific
    approach to social problems.
  • The shift was caused by changes in the nature of
    the Industrial Revolution and the age of
    imperialism. Latin American economies expanded
    rapidly after 1850 and the population doubled.
    There were new demands for Latin American
    products, and foreign entrepreneurs and bankers
    joined liberals, landowners, and merchants to tie
    Latin America to the capitalist expansion of the
    Western economy.
  • The new political leaders were inspired by the
    example of western Europe and the United States,
    but their distrust of their mass populations
    prevented the success of many efforts. Economic
    growth often occurred at the expense of the
    peasantry landowners and governments
    expropriated land and developed forms of tenancy,
    peonage, and disguised servitude.

15
c) Mexico Instability and Foreign Intervention
  • The 1824 Mexican constitution was a federalist
    document that established a republic and
    guaranteed basic civil rights. But it did not
    address the serious issues of inequitable
    distribution of land, the status of Indians, the
    problems of education, or the poverty of most of
    the population.
  • Conservative centralists opposed liberal
    federalists foreign commercial agents added
    additional complications. Liberals during the
    early 1830s tried sweeping reforms, but they fell
    before a conservative reaction led by Antonio
    López de Santa Ana. He was a typical caudillo,
    and the defects of the regime drew foreign
    intervention by Spain and France.
  • In 1845 the United States, with an eye on
    California and moved by manifest destiny, a
    belief that it was destined to rule the continent
    from coast to coast, annexed Texas. Santa Anna
    responded by leading the Mexican forces against
    the United States in the Mexican-American War,
    which ended in Mexican defeat and the signing of
    the disadvantageous Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
    in 1848, which caused the loss of about one half
    of its territory. The war left a bitter distrust
    of the United States and caused a serious loss of
    Mexican economic potential.

16
c) Mexico Instability and Foreign Intervention
  • Politicians were stimulated to confront their
    nation's internal problems, which had contributed
    to defeat. Indian lawyer Benito Juárez led a
    liberal revolt in 1854 and inaugurated a new
    constitution in 1857.
  • Military and church privileges were curtailed,
    and church and Indian communal lands were sold to
    individuals. Speculators, however, bought the
    land and left peasants and Indians poorer than
    they had been previously. Conservative reaction
    led to civil war and the summoning of French
    assistance.
  • The French placed Maximilian von Habsburg on the
    throne, but Juárez refused to accept the foreign
    ruler. When the French withdrew in 1867,
    Maximilian was captured and executed. Juárez
    regained office to lead an autocratic regime
    until his death in 1872. By 1880, Mexico was
    about to enter a period of strong central
    government and political stability.

17
d) Argentina The Port and the Nation
  • The economy of Argentina was divided between the
    commercial port of Buenos Aires and pampas of the
    surrounding territories. The United Republic of
    Rio de la Plata declared independence in 1816 but
    did not long stay together.
  • Liberal efforts to create a strong central
    government provoked a federalist reaction that
    gained power in 1831 under Juan Manuel de Rosas.
    A weak central government and local autonomy
    followed that favored the merchants of Buenos
    Aires and the surrounding ranchers.
  • Campaigns against Indians opened new lands in the
    South. Rosas ruled in a populist, authoritarian
    manner and exiled his opponents. Liberals and
    regional caudillos joined to overthrow Rosas in
    1852.

18
d) Argentina The Port and the Nation
  • After a confused decade of political turmoil,
    opponents compromised to create a unified nation
    called the Argentine Republic. Between 1862 and
    1890, Domingo F. Sarmiento and other able leaders
    initiated wide political and economic reforms.
  • Political stability brought foreign investment a
    great boost in exports brought prosperity.
  • The population tripled as many European
    immigrants came to take advantage of the good
    times. Increased revenues allowed infrastructure
    development.
  • National unity and pride grew after a successful
    war against Paraguay and the defeat of the
    southern Indians.

19
e) The Brazilian Empire
  • Many problems were present behind Brazil's facade
    of nineteenth-century political stability. Pedro
    I issued a liberal constitution in 1824 but still
    acted as an autocrat.
  • He was forced to abdicate in 1831 regents then
    ran the country in the name of his young son
    Pedro II, who came to power in 1840, in what
    really was an experiment in republican
    government.
  • Internal disputes between liberals and
    conservatives were complicated by arguments for
    and against the monarchy. Provinces opposed
    centralized rule, and many unsuccessful regional
    revolts ensued.
  • The development of coffee as an export crop
    brought economic resurgence. There was an
    intensification of slavery until 1850.

20
e) The Brazilian Empire
  • Prosperity continued after 1850 along with
    political tranquility. The communication and
    transport systems improved foreign investment
    increased.
  • New political currents included the growth of
    urban and middle-class groups less tied to
    landholding and slavery and the arrival of
    thousands of European immigrants who reduced
    dependence on slaves. The abolitionist movement
    gained strength, and slaves increasingly
    resisted. Slavery was abolished in 1888. Support
    for the monarchy waned.
  • A long war against Paraguay brought the military
    into politics, but quarrels with the church drew
    them into opposition. Planters turned away from
    slavery to positivist ideas.
  • The Republican Party, formed in 1871, won wide
    support, and a coup replaced the monarchy with a
    republic in 1889. Social and political problems
    caused by modernization remained unresolved.

21
IV) Societies in Search of Themselves
  • Tension remained in cultural life between
    European and American influences and between the
    elite and the common folk.
  • Social change for the masses and for women came
    slowly.
  • By the end of the century the desire for progress
    and economic resurgence were beginning to have a
    social effects.

22
a) Cultural Expression after Independence
  • Independence opened up Latin America to direct
    influence from other European nations. The elite
    followed Europe's examples in intellectual and
    artistic life.
  • In the 1830s, Romanticism became important and
    turned interest to Indians and local customs.
  • By the 1870s, the focus changed a new realism
    came to the arts and literature along with the
    ideas of positivism.
  • Mass culture was not affected by elite trends
    traditional forms flourished but were ignored by
    most of the elite.

23
b) Old Patterns of Gender, Class, and Race
  • Women, despite participation in the revolutions,
    gained little ground during the nineteenth
    century. They continued as wives and mothers
    under the authority of men they could not vote
    or hold office.
  • Lower-class women had more economic and personal
    freedom but otherwise shared in subordination.
  • Public education became more open to women to
    prepare them for more enlightened roles in the
    home. New occupational opportunities opened for
    women in teaching.
  • Educated women, by the end of the century,
    actively demanded increased rights. Most of the
    new nations legally ended the society of castes
    in which status depended on color and ethnicity.

24
b) Old Patterns of Gender, Class, and Race
  • In reality, very little changed for Indians and
    former slaves.
  • The expansion of the export economy in many ways
    intensified old patterns. Personal liberties were
    sacrificed to economic growth.
  • Control of land, politics, and the economy was
    dominated by a small, white, Creole elite.
  • Latin America entered the 1880s as a
    predominantly agrarian group of nations with
    rigid social structures and were dependent on the
    world market.

25
c) In Depth Explaining Underdevelopment
  • Latin America, because of its early winning of
    independence and entry into the world economy,
    provides a useful example for study of the
    problems faced by underdeveloped nations.
  • Their experience grew from the influences of
    their Hispanic cultural heritage.
  • When independence came, the European models of
    economy, law, and government that were adopted
    failed to bring either prosperity or social
    harmony.
  • In the search for alternative policies, some
    condemned the Hispanic legacy others turned to
    Marxism.

26
c) In Depth Explaining Underdevelopment
  • Latin Americans often compared their experiences
    with those of the United States.
  • Answers for the questions increasingly were
    sought in analyses of a world economic and
    political system.
  • They turned to modernization theory, a following
    of the path taken in western Europe.
  • Refinements of the theories led to an acceptance
    of dependency theory that envisaged development
    and underdevelopment as part of the same process.
  • The process of theorizing continues.

27
V) The Great Boom, 1880-1920
  • The increasing demand in industrializing Europe
    stimulated Latin American economic growth.
    Liberal ideologyindividual freedom, open
    markets, limited government intervention in the
    economyprepared the way for expansion.
  • The ideology was adopted by the small urban
    middle class, landholders, miners, and export
    merchants. These groups forged political
    alliances to direct governments in their favor at
    the expense of the peasants and working class.
  • Export products fueled the expansion and provided
    resources for imports of foreign manufactured
    goods and local development projects. It was
    always a risky business, since market prices
    depended on outside conditions.
  • The developing commerce drew the interest of
    foreign investors. Germany and the United States
    joined Britain as major participants. The capital
    brought in was useful, but it placed key
    industries under foreign control, and it
    influenced the internal and external policies of
    governments.

28
a) Mexico and Argentina Examples of Economic
Transformation
  • In Mexico in 1876, Porfirio Díaz was elected
    president he dominated politics for 35 years.
    Díaz imposed a strong central government and used
    foreign capital for internal infrastructure
    development and industrialization. His
    administration subverted liberal democratic
    principles to preserve power and continue
    modernization. Behind these policies were a
    number of advisors called cientificos, who were
    strongly influenced by positivist ideas and
    wanted to impose a scientific approach to the
    national economy.
  • Opposition was suppressed, and growth occurred at
    the expense of the peasantry and working class.
    When strikes and unrest increased, a national
    police force and the army kept order. Regional
    political bosses rigged elections in support of
    the regime.
  • By 1910, a middle-class reform movement emerged
    and sought electoral reform. Other opposition
    groups joined it, and a bloody ten-year civil war
    followed.

29
a) Mexico and Argentina Examples of Economic
Transformation
  • In Argentina, another path of economic expansion
    was followed. Buenos Aires and the rest of the
    nation worked together after 1880 to bring
    expansion and stability. Technological change,
    especially refrigerated ships for exporting meat,
    helped the process labor came from a flood of
    immigrants. By 1914, one third of the population
    was foreign-born. They fused their various
    European identities into a distinct culture.
    Workers wanted political expression, and in the
    1890s, a socialist party formed.
  • Strikes and government repression marked the
    decade after 1910. The Argentinean oligarchy
    attempted some reforms. A party representing the
    emerging middle class, the Radical Party, took
    shape. Aided by the reforms of an electoral law
    of 1912, it came to power in 1916. When it met
    labor unrest, the party was as repressive as its
    predecessors. Similar patterns occurred in the
    economic and political life of the rest of Latin
    America. Ruling oligarchies of the traditional
    aristocracies allied with the middle classes
    faced rising labor and rural unrest and
    rebellion.

30
b) Uncle Sam Goes South
  • American political and economic interest in Latin
    America grew after the Civil War.
  • The Spanish-American War of 1898 brought the
    United States directly into Latin American
    affairs.
  • American investment in Cuba predated the war, and
    following it the door was open for direct
    involvement in the Caribbean.
  • Cuba became an American economic dependent, and
    Puerto Rico was annexed.

31
b) Uncle Sam Goes South
  • When Colombia was reluctant to meet American
    proposals for building the Panama Canal, the
    United States backed a revolution in Panama and
    gained exclusive rights over the canal.
  • Latin Americans, as a consequence, became very
    suspicious of the expansionist United States.

32
c) Global Connections New Latin American Nations
and the World
  • Despite all of the economic, social, and
    political changes occurring in Latin America
    after independence, its countries remained
    remarkably unchanged.
  • Revolutions and reforms made few, if any, real
    changes. To some extent, Latin America ran
    against the currents of global history in the
    nineteenth century.
  • In the age of imperialism it cast off colonial
    control. In this sense, Latin America was a bit
    more isolated from the rest of the world.
  • Efforts to emulate the West did occur.
    Intervention from the United States was another
    outside force.
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